Thank you, Partner @bibliolifestyle @eccobooks for the
review copy of The Great Divide by Cristina Henriquez.
Are you a mood reader? Or do you make elaborate plans
before you choose reading? I do make elaborate
plans on what I’m going to read, but I do veer off with varying moods. The Great Divide was a late book added into
my March reading and I veered into reading it as I was greatly intrigued by the
premise.
In 1907, people are all gathering in Panama to work on
one of the wonders of the world, the Panama Canal. Ada left her home in Barbados to look for a
job to earn money to pay for medical procedures to help her sister. John Oswald hires her to be a caregiver to
his wife, Marian. Marian and John had
traveled to Panama from Tennessee. John
is a scientist that is working on the cure for malaria. Marian is a scientist herself. Omar does not want to be a fisherman like his
father and has set off on an adventure of his own. How will these characters’ stories intertwine? And how will they intertwine with the many
other characters in this novel?
My thoughts on this story:
· The
Great Divide gave a great overall sense of how many people from all different
places and walks of life that it took to build the Panama Canal, and how it
impacted the people that lived there.
· Sickness
was very prevalent and terrifying. Malaria
killed so many people that were working on or supporting the work on the canal.
· There
were a lot of characters in this story, and it took awhile to build up the
story and figure out how they were all together. I liked learning the connections. It was like an interwoven tapestry of life.
· As
there were a lot of characters, I wish there would have been a character list
and family trees at the start of the book for me to reference as I was first
getting into the book.
· This
was a great character driven novel and I found it to be intriguing. It was not plot driven, so it was a slower
read for me.
· The
description of the location made me feel like I was there. I would love to visit Panama someday.
· I
wish there would have been details about the engineering and construction of
the canal. I’m an engineer and I was
first attracted to this book because the back of the cover described the Panama
Canal as a major historical engineering feat.
That is about as much engineering as you will get with this book. It’s all about the characters.
· The
Great Divide made me think about how many people it takes to build such great
engineering marvels and how they are the unsung heroes that don’t usually get
their story told.
· Speaking
of unsung heroes, I don’t want to spoil a plot point, but I thought it was interesting
when a female character passed away and how her obituary only really discussed
her husband. It makes you wonder how many
stories we don’t know about people after they passed, especially women.
Overall, The Great Divide by Cristina Henriquez was historical
fiction as its best, telling the interwoven stories of many people at a key
point in history.
Women are often missing from the historical record. There must be so many interestiing women we don't know about from history
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your review with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge.